What is the FLR for 1 and 3/4 fire hose that is 100 feet long?
So you put a safety pin through an autoclave? Did you wipe the rust off it before your pierced with it, or after? The very poor quality metal in a safety pin won't withstand a proper autoclave cycle, that's why we use piercing needles made from 316L steel. Tell your mom to take you to a professional piercer or doctor. It needs to be removed. It will not heal that way, the safety pin will rust inside your body and your chances of getting an infection are pretty high. You may even have a low grade infection at this point. If it is already infected, you need medical supervision, as taking it out can cause it to abcess. Even if you manage to avoid infection (doubtfull), the piercing will not heal as it's been done incorrectly. The tissue should not sit the way it does (swelling does not account for that), the 'jewelry' is all wrong for that type of piercing and it will reject. If you knew it wasn't the smartest thing to do, why on earth did you do it?
interesting story, troll - the very first thing you need to do is grow a brain and learn how to use it. otherwise you should march your young *ss down to the police station and turn yourself in as a sex offender. or the obvious other choice is to drop out of school and get a job in another town flipping burgers
Depending on where you live (safe or unsafe neighborhood) you should be able to just disconnect the siren and continue to use the car as-is. There should be a positive and negative wire. Just cut the positive wire and you will just disable the alarm. OR It sounds like an aftermarket car alarm. Often the installers of these units just TWIST tie the wires together. They are good for few years at most, but then they start having these kind of problems. You can try and follow the wires OUT of the alarm and see if you can find loose wires (or a short from broken insulator). Even if the connections look good, try reconnecting them (cut, strip and solder or use crimp connector). You will have to unwrap all the electrical tapes and check. But wrapping them again would not be a problem, just make sure you make a good connectin (solder or crimp the wires together). For my money and time, I would just install another new alarm system. If you are good at wiring you can get a kit for about $50 to $100. And you'll learn a lot about how they work (and how to fix them. Don't forget to vote for the BEST ANSWER - please - whoever it may be. FACT: You also get +3 points when you vote for BEST ANSWER